Jim Dandy Fast Foods, Inc. v. Carpenter

535 S.W.2d 786, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2654
CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedApril 1, 1976
Docket16663
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 535 S.W.2d 786 (Jim Dandy Fast Foods, Inc. v. Carpenter) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Jim Dandy Fast Foods, Inc. v. Carpenter, 535 S.W.2d 786, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2654 (Tex. Ct. App. 1976).

Opinion

COLEMAN, Chief Justice.

Miriam Carpenter, plaintiff, sued Jim Dandy Fast Foods, Inc., to recover damages by reason of personal injuries suffered by her as a result of eating a piece of chicken sold to her by defendant. Judgment was rendered for the plaintiff based on the jury verdict.

Jim Dandy Fast Foods, Inc., owns and operates a retail fried chicken restaurant known as Church’s Fried Chicken located in Texas City, Texas. On September 16, 1970, plaintiff entered this restaurant and ordered a fried breast of chicken. After receiving her order, she sat down at a table. She then took her fingers and pulled a piece from the meaty portion of the chicken breast and put it in her mouth. This was a piece of white meat covered with a heavy crust. She chewed it up and swallowed it. She then felt something in her throat and took a bite of bread thinking that a piece of the crust had stuck in her throat and the bread would cause it to go on into her stomach. After she realized it was a bone, she attempted to remove it with her finger. Her attempt was unsuccessful and she was bleeding. She asked an employee to direct her to a doctor and was eventually admitted to a hospital where a piece of bone was removed from her throat.

There is testimony that the doctor and his nurse accompanied the plaintiff as she left the operating room and that the doctor gave to plaintiff’s husband a piece of chicken bone at that time. The trial court admitted this piece of bone into evidence. This is a small curved bone one inch in length. One end is smoothly cut at an angle creating a sharp point. The other end is not a smooth cut.

The plaintiff testified that she knew that there were bones in chicken and that she knew certain areas where those bones were located. She did not expect a bone to be in the part of the chicken breast which she placed in her mouth. She had never encountered a bone in that particular part of the chicken. When she received the chicken she couldn’t see anything wrong with it such as bones sticking out. She did not feel the bone as she chewed the chicken.

Dr. Stiernberg, an ear, nose and throat specialist, testified that he removed a piece of chicken bone from the plaintiff’s esophagus. He did not remember whether or not he gave the piece of bone to the plaintiff.

Mr. Pete Ober testified that for many years he had been engaged in the meat business and was experienced in cutting up chicken for the retail trade. He had examined the piece of bone introduced as an *788 exhibit in this case. He testified that he had never seen a chicken bone cut like that before. He testified that the piece of bone was a part of the wishbone. He always disjointed the chicken and left the wishbone whole. He stated that it was not proper to cut up a chicken in such a manner as to leave part of the breast meat on the wing piece. He stated that while the wishbone was part of the breast it was not joined to the breastbone. He testified that the wishbone was ordinarily cut as a separate piece of chicken, but that at times the breast was split. In such a case half of the wishbone would be found which would be a lot longer than the piece in question. He testified that if a person is eating a piece of breast and pulls off one piece of the breast he should not encounter a bone like the one in question.

Mr. Lawrence Smith, president of City Poultry Processing Company, a division of Jim Dandy Fast Foods, testified. He was familiar with the manner in which chickens were cut up for Church’s Fried Chicken. It is an 8-piece cut. There are nine government inspectors and one government grader in the plant at all times that it is in operation. The inspectors check to see that the poultry is fit for human consumption and the grader checks to see whether the chicken is properly cut.

Mrs. Lois Hale who is a supervisor with the defendant testified that the U.S.D.A. inspectors make a random check probably two times a day to determine whether the chicken is cut up in the fashion established by the defendant. They do not examine individual pieces other than to see that they are cut in a uniform manner. She testified that the wishbone is not taken off but that it is a part of the piece of breast.

Mr. Smith testified that 50,000 to 60,000 chickens per day were processed in the plant; that the management specifies that chickens be cut into eight pieces and that they advertise larger, bigger and better pieces. The cutters are instructed to cut the breast into two pieces except that part of the breast is also left attached to each wing in order to give the wing portion a little more of a meaty characteristic. The upper shoulder of the breast is left attached to the wing and the remainder is cut into two pieces. The inspections are visual and are made by means of random spot checks.

Mr. Smith testified that if the chicken is improperly cut internally so that a bone is “cut internally incorrectly” there would be no way to find this from a visual inspection. He was asked, “If something in wrong on the inside, say chipping has occurred where bone got imbedded in the meat, there would be no way for the inspector to notice this?” In answer he stated: “I don’t know. I assume if it was deep in the meat, they don’t x-ray or anything of that nature. It’s possible.” Mrs. Hale was shown the bone which was introduced into evidence and was asked if she would expect to encounter a bone like that in the breast and she answered that she would. When she was asked if she would expect it to be off the front of the breast she answered, “No, no. No, not on the meaty part, no.” She stated that if you pull of a piece of the meat from the front of the breast the piece of bone would not be in there. She had never seen a bone in the meaty top part of the breast. She testified that it was their practice to split the breast down the center and that the pulley bone would be cut into two pieces, but that the pieces would not look like the exhibit in this case. She further stated that she did not know whether she had ever cut anything like the exhibit because “it’s in the meat.”

In answer to Special Issue No. 1 the jury found that the chicken served by the defendant to the plaintiff on September 16, 1970, “was in a defective and unreasonable dangerous condition making it unfit for human consumption.” By answer to Special Issue No. 2 the jury found that the “defective and unreasonable dangerous condition” of the chicken was a proximate cause of the plaintiff’s injuries.

Special Issue No. 4 reads:

“Do you find from a preponderance of the evidence that Miriam Carpenter, in buying and receiving the chicken breast in question, at the time and on the occa *789 sion in question, had reasonable expectation of finding bones in, about, and around the chicken breast, as she bit into, chewed, and swallowed the chicken breast and knew that she would have to use the care and prudence for her own safety in the exercise of such precaution for her own well being, as a person of ordinary prudence in the exercise of ordinary care under the same or similar circumstances?”

The jury answered, “She did have reasonable expectation.” but in answer to the next special issue failed to find that the failure of Miriam Carpenter with respect to the reasonable expectation of finding bones was a proximate cause of any injury or damage she received.

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Bluebook (online)
535 S.W.2d 786, 1976 Tex. App. LEXIS 2654, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/jim-dandy-fast-foods-inc-v-carpenter-texapp-1976.